Advertisement
French Open
SportTennis

Here’s why Zheng Qinwen’s French Open failure could cost her millions in sponsor deals

As compatriot Wang Xiyu exceeds her best grand slam showing, Olympic champion Zheng is likely to suffer more damage after her first-round loss

3-MIN READ3-MIN
3
Listen
Zheng Qinwen crying during her press conference after losing in the French Open first round to Maja Chwalinska of Poland on Monday. Photo: Xinhua
Stephy Zhang

For one Chinese tennis player the unfamiliar surrounds of a place in the last 32 of a grand slam, for another a continuing fall down the rankings and the potential loss of millions in sponsorship revenue.

There were contrasting fortunes for qualifier Wang Xiyu, No 148 in the world, and Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen at the French Open this week, although in truth only history makes the latter’s travails a surprise.

Wang’s superb run as the only Chinese woman left in the women’s singles continued at Roland Garros on Friday with a 6-3, 7-5 victory over Yuliia Starodubtseva of Ukraine.

Advertisement

While Wang exceeded her previous career-best grand slam effort at the 2022 US Open, compatriot Zheng, a quarter-finalist in Paris last year, slipped further down the world rankings, facing accusations that commercial interests hampered her recovery from elbow surgery last year.

Still, crashing out in straight sets to Poland’s Maja Chwalinska, a 24-year-old qualifier ranked 113th in the world, was a shock even by Zheng’s recent standards. It reduced the former No 4 to tears in the press conference afterwards.
Wang Xiyu has progressed to the fourth round of a grand slam for the first time. Photo: Xinhua
Wang Xiyu has progressed to the fourth round of a grand slam for the first time. Photo: Xinhua

“This is definitely a heavy loss. Maybe it can give me a different perspective and help me come back stronger next time,” Zheng said.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x